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Turkey sentences Armenian writer

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  • Turkey sentences Armenian writer

    BBC NEWS
    7 October 2005
    Turkey sentences Armenian writer

    Journalists have raised concerns about aspects of the penal reforms
    A journalist in Turkey has been found guilty of insulting Turkish identity
    and given a suspended six-month jail sentence by a court in Istanbul.
    Hrant Dink, of Armenian-Turkish descent, wrote a newspaper column which he
    argued was aimed at improving relations between Turkey and Armenia.
    The prosecution interpreted one part as an insult, but Mr Dink has said he
    will appeal against the ruling.
    The verdict follows criminal code reforms as Turkey seeks to join the EU.
    The reforms were intended to improve freedom of speech in Turkey.
    The article written by Mr Dink addressed the killings of hundreds of
    thousands of Armenians during Ottoman rule in 1917.
    Armenians, supported by several countries, want Turkey to recognise the
    events as a genocide. Turkey rejects that description, saying the deaths
    occurred in a civil war in which many Turks were also killed.
    Humiliation
    A paragraph in the article calling on Armenians to symbolically reject "the
    adulterated part of their Turkish blood" was taken as offensive.
    " If I'm guilty of insulting a nation then it's a matter of honour not to
    live here" Hrant Dink.
    The judge ruled that Mr Dink's newspaper column implied that Turkish blood
    was dirty.
    He is the editor of a bilingual Armenian-Turkish newspaper, Agos.
    The BBC's Sarah Rainsford said the judge ordered a suspended sentence as it
    was Mr Dink's first offence.
    But the nationalist lawyers who brought the case were disappointed.
    "There was an obvious humiliation and result of this case should be at least
    two and a half years or three years criminal charge," one said.
    "But I think that Turkish courts are under big pressure due to these
    European Union accession talks."
    'No crime'
    Mr Dink's lawyer Fethiye Cetin said the ruling showed how little had changed
    under Turkey's new criminal code, despite international and internal
    pressure.
    "There was no crime here," she told the BBC. "We expected our client to get
    off."
    Our correspondent says human rights lawyers believe his case shows there are
    still no-go areas for discussion here and the new laws leave substantial
    room for interpretation.
    Mr Dink says he will appeal against the ruling. But if he cannot clear his
    name, he will leave the country.
    "If I'm guilty of insulting a nation," he told the BBC, "then it's a matter
    of honour not to live here."
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